Category Archives: Film

Jungle is massive

Just saw, and really enjoyed, Peter Jackson’s Kong. Will make a faint effort to avoid spoilers, but in essence:

CG v. impressive
I’m not sure if Jack Black is slightly miscast, but brings some humour
The whole “t’was beauty stayed the beast’s hand” thing, cheesy as it was, I loved
Script good enough, cinematography v. beautiful (as is leading lady, Naomi Watts)
And the climax of the whole film for me: Kong vs. T-Rex. Nuff said; go watch it now!

Postscript: Orange Wednesday played up tonight and nearly stopped me watching the film. V. frustrating! They claimed it was traffic to the autoresponse line… rubbish! I’d advise all to text 241 well in advance (available in advance from Thurs am each week, apparently) to get their BOGOF for this one…

Batman Begins

Yes he does. What a film.

Had a huge time watching this last night (even if an IMAX cinema was possibly the wrong place to see it).

It is massively entertaining. Words fail me. They might help me out again tomorrow, when I’m not running late for work…!

Episode III

I’ve just seen a preview screening of Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. Wanting to spare you all from spoilers, I will just say this: it is good. I mean, really, genuinely good — still plagued by some of George Lucas’ ineptitude concerning how men and women (and human beings generally) interact; but good action, good story development, and really getting into the mood the first trilogy had.

Well done, Georgie boy. You may have redeemed yourself somewhat.

Long time no see…

Ah, the long silence, at last broken.

I’ve had an extraordinatily busy Q1 (how offensively management speak is that?) – as you can imagine from my digital silence.

One of my clients was at the 3GSM World Congress in February, so had a lot of work on that month, and between that, and various other bits & pieces going on in my life, there’s been little opportunity to blog. I’m keen to refresh the site in some way – perhaps a moderate redesign and somehow inserting a delicious linklog in here somewhere – but that, as with everything, requires a little more than I have at the moment. April was busy gearing up for Infosec at work… And May will be busy catching up on everything else that I’ve been missing out on!

Few things to update on, quickly:

(1) Am now seeing someone – which is great and holds all the excitement and terror that you can imagine that might bring. It is going really well at the moment – in fact, am freshly returned from a weekend away in Barcelona with the good lady, so all good.

(2) My parents came to visit for Easter and we had a very nice trip to Bath – good town!

(3) Have a new computer – so taking a while to get all software etc., set up to allow usual sleekness of blogging – including the “what I’m listening to” plugin etc., so please bear that in mind.

(4) I’ve reviewed the new Hitchhiker’s film for The London Line.

(5) I still think jam & cheese is the way forward.

I’m going to try to start posting more regularly, and will look for a decent photo-sharing service. Chris keeps banging on about Flickr, so I’ll have to look that up.

Hope you’re all well out there.

Summer heat

It’s been damn hot the last few days. It might seems pitiful that someone who gew up within spitting distance of the equator swelters and whinges about a mild hot spell in London, and in truth, I’m not complaining – the hot weather was great over the weekend. Lazing around in the sunshine in Regent’s Park, reading through my thesis (grrr – if I ever see a professional philosopher again, I don’t know what I’ll do!) was really quite wonderful.

I’m not looking forward to having to spend most of the day cooped up in a hot office building though – that’s less than 100% Colombian fun. Don’t get me wrong – I love my job – but I think they should call siestas for the summer months.

But, coming to the point of this post (insofar as it has one): all is well with me; I’ve watched a lot of movies of late (The Punisher, Brazil, Brain Dead, 13 going on 30, High Fidelity and Grosse Point Blank (again!) and more), read a little (finished Timoleon Vieta come Home – brilliant – and about to start Fortress of Solitute, once I get this thesis dealt with), and been working a lot. New client started at work last week – Cisco Systems – which is great, but obviously its been a bit busy at work dealing with the additional load.

Not much else is on. Results of the MRI come in tomorrow (woo), I’ve taken to saying “woo” a lot (woo!), and think people should stop singing “Armand David” to the tune of “Craig David” when I call them. All else is good in Armo’s world.

Off to Cambridge next weekend if I get enough work done this week. Wish me luck.

[Listening to: Am I the Only One? – Barenaked Ladies – Maybe You Should Drive (04:50)]

Spidey 2…

…ROCKED my little world.

Was v. enjoyable — all the characters developed well, the new ones were interesting and well performed, the CGI was further improved, and the storyline lived up to its Michael-Chabon enhanced goodness (although he wasn’t evident in the credits).

Utterly beautiful opening sequence.

And Kirsten Dunst is outstanding.

[Listening to: Closing Time – Semisonic – Feeling Strangely Fine (04:33)]

So much to blog, so little time

Ok, so there’s 8,000 inane websites like this one popping up every day, but that’s not going to stop me from annoying my friends with whatever trivia, observations, or self-referential prose with limited aim that I feel like. So Nyah.

Quick three or four part blog.

Good books: Anthropology, by Dan Rhodes – a 100 stories about girlfriends, at a paragraph each, provided me with a couple of bus journeys worth of absolute delight. Brilliant and satirical, terrible and emotional, they are the story any man can empathise with. It was like a punch to my emotional solarplexus; utter genius.

Also: In the City by the Sea, by Kamila Shamsie is utter brilliance; despite being a woman and an adult, Ms Shamsie brilliantly steps into the mind of an 11-year-old boy in a slightly fictionalised version of Pakistan. Having recently read a review by Kamila of another author’s book where she said literally nothing about the content of the book, I feel obliged to do exactly the opposite here – this is the story of a boy who’s uncle, a leader in the opposition, is placed under arrest by the despot General calling the shots. It tells his reaction, his decision to “depose the President”, his conversations with a cast of lively and unbelievable characters who you want to believe could be real – The Oldest Man, Wid, Ami and Aba, Salman Mamoo, and the wonderful Zehra, who I think, had I been 11, I would have fallen in love with. The whole story is told with reference to one of the most utterly devastating but remarkably concise opening sequences ever, in which the book’s hero, Hassan Haq, watches his neighbour, Azeem, fall off a roof to his death while trying to fly a kite. A metaphor for freedom, or an illustration of death without purpose; I haven’t finished it yet, so I don’t know. So far, it is utter lyrical genius, I go through the full range of my emotions from one paragraph to the next and feel the need to read bits out loud. I’m reading it slower as I approach the climax – I can’t bear to see what happens to the heroic Salman Haq.

Filmwize: Shrek 2 – 100% as good as Shrek 1, ’nuff said. Garfield – terrible, even for a longstanding Jim Davis, Lasagna and Jennifer Love-Hewitt fan. The Girl Next Door – cringeworthy American teen trash – I liked it a lot. I think that’s enough for now.

Music: undergoing a slight indie revival – Keane, Killers, Razorlight (and yes, ok, Busted and Mcfly), have been on my playlists lately, as well as the Spider-Man 2 soundtrack. Some good stuff there.

Finally: life – been busy. There’ve been some good parties lately, and I’ve met some very good new people: here’s to more, once the thesis is dealt with (I’m dealing, I’m dealing).

[Listening to: run – snow patrol (05:56)]

“What is the why?”

Am reading an awesome book at the moment, which I thought I’d heartily recommend to the interweb at large: It’s called the Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, and its by Michael Chabon. Telling the story of a couple of Jewish boys during the second world war, determined to cash in on “Opportunity” when it comes along and write a comic book that makes them “kill” (i.e. a lot of money – its not obvious in the book’s context, either).

Joe Kavalier is a Czech immigrant to the US, who’s recently escaped Hitler’s grasp, and is a prodigious artist and trained escape artist. Sammy Clay, Joe’s cousin, is an ambitious, but mediocre, artist, with a strong entrepreneurial bent, a gimpy leg from a childhood bout of polio, an extremely creative mind and a big heart. “What is the why” is Joe’s question to Sammy when wondering about the motivation of the hero of their comic book.

It’s a fantastic tale, and makes me excited about Spider Man 2, which according to Tom is written by Mr. Chabon. Tom should know, he tried to win a writing competition which the big MC adjudicated.

Of course, which such a great name, and such a good story behind it, it was merely a matter of time before they made a movie.

[Listening to: Walking After You – Foo Fighters – The Colour and the Shape (05:04)]